| Literature DB >> 34795404 |
Sergio Garbarino1, Paola Lanteri2, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi3, Nicola Magnavita4,5, Egeria Scoditti6.
Abstract
Modern societies are experiencing an increasing trend of reduced sleep duration, with nocturnal sleeping time below the recommended ranges for health. Epidemiological and laboratory studies have demonstrated detrimental effects of sleep deprivation on health. Sleep exerts an immune-supportive function, promoting host defense against infection and inflammatory insults. Sleep deprivation has been associated with alterations of innate and adaptive immune parameters, leading to a chronic inflammatory state and an increased risk for infectious/inflammatory pathologies, including cardiometabolic, neoplastic, autoimmune and neurodegenerative diseases. Here, we review recent advancements on the immune responses to sleep deprivation as evidenced by experimental and epidemiological studies, the pathophysiology, and the role for the sleep deprivation-induced immune changes in increasing the risk for chronic diseases. Gaps in knowledge and methodological pitfalls still remain. Further understanding of the causal relationship between sleep deprivation and immune deregulation would help to identify individuals at risk for disease and to prevent adverse health outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34795404 PMCID: PMC8602722 DOI: 10.1038/s42003-021-02825-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Commun Biol ISSN: 2399-3642
Fig. 1Brain cytokines (CYT, orange circles) network and different suggested routes by which peripherally released inflammatory signals can bypass the blood–brain barrier and circumventricular organs (CVOs), and activate the central nervous system: humoral, cellular, and neural pathways.
CCL-2: C-C motif chemokine ligand-2; CXCL-10: C-X-C motif chemokine ligand 10; IL-1: interleukin-1; mNTS: medial nucleus tractus solitarius; PGE2: prostaglandin E2; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor-α.
Fig. 2Immune consequences of sleep deprivation.
Sleep deprivation, as induced experimentally or in the context of habitual short sleep, has been found to be associated with alterations in the circulating numbers and/or activity of total leukocytes and specific cell subsets, elevation of systemic and tissue (e.g., brain) pro-inflammatory markers including cytokines (e.g., interleukins [IL], tumor necrosis factor [TNF]-α), chemokines and acute phase proteins (such as C reactive Protein [CRP]), altered antigen presentation (reduced dendritic cells, altered pattern of activating cytokines, etc.), lowered Th1 response, higher Th2 response, and reduced antibody production. Furthermore, altered monocytes responsiveness to immunological challenges such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS) may contribute to sleep deprivation-associated immune modulation. Hypothesized links between immune dysregulation by sleep deprivation and the risk for immune-related diseases, such as infectious, cardiovascular, metabolic, and neurodegenerative and neoplastic diseases, are shown. The illustrations were modified from Servier Medical Art (http://smart.servier.com/), licensed under a Creative Common Attribution 3.0 Generic License. APC: antigen-presenting cells.
Fig. 3Pro-inflammatory molecular pathways induced by sleep deprivation.
A schematic model of potential mechanistic pathways linking sleep deprivation and inflammatory immune activation is depicted. Sleep deprivation is associated with activation of the sympathetic nervous system and release of norepinephrine and epinephrine into the systemic circulation, as well as to some extent with impaired hypothalamus-pituitary axis stimulation. These neuromediators may act along with other potential stimuli accumulated following sleep deprivation including reactive oxygen species (ROS), adenosine, metabolic waste products (e.g., β-amyloid) not cleared during normal sleep, gut microbiota dysbiosis leading to altered local and systemic pattern of metabolic products, as well as with changes in the profile of neuro-endocrine hormones, such as prolactin, growth hormone, and altered circadian rhythm of melatonin secretion. In immune cells located in the brain and the peripheral tissues, these stimuli may in concert trigger inflammatory activation, with release of cytokines, chemokines, acute phase protein, etc. via the recruitment of transcriptional regulators of pro-inflammatory gene expression, mainly nuclear factor (NF)-κB, and disturbing the circadian rhythmicity of gene expression of both clock genes and metabolic, immune and stress response genes (see text for further detail). E: epinephrine; NE: norepinephrine; TLR: Toll-like receptor. Arrows indicate stimulation; lines indicate inhibition. The illustrations were modified from Servier Medical Art (http://smart.servier.com/), licensed under a Creative Common Attribution 3.0 Generic License.
Main human findings on the effects of recovery sleep on sleep deprivation-induced changes in immune and inflammatory parameters.
| Subjects (number and age range or mean) | Sleep deprivation protocol | Effect of sleep deprivation on immune parameters compared with baseline | Recovery sleep protocol | Effect of recovery sleep on immune parameters compared with baseline | Effect of recovery sleep on immune parameters compared with sleep deprivation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy men and women ( | 64 h TSD | ↑ Granulocytes and monocytes, NK cell activity | 1 Night (h sleep not reported) | ↑ Granulocytes, monocytes; = NK cell activity | = Granulocytes; ↓ monocytes; ↓ NK cell activity | Dinges et al.[ |
| Healthy men ( | 2 Nights TSD or 4 nights of REM SD | TSD: ↑ total leukocytes, neutrophils, CD4 T cells; REM SD: ↓ IgA | 3 Nights (8 h sleep/night) | = Total leukocytes, neutrophils; ↑ CD4 T cells ↓ IgA | ND | Ruiz et al.[ |
| Healthy young men ( | 1 Night TSD | During SD: ↑ monocytes, lymphocytes, NK cells. The day after SD: ↓ lymphocytes, NK cells | 1 Night (8 h sleep) | = Monocytes, lymphocytes; ↓ NK cells | ND | Born et al.[ |
| Healthy men ( | 40 h TSD | ↑ Plasma E-selectin; ↑ systolic BP, heart rate; plasma norepinephrine; ↓ endothelium-dependent and -independent vasodilation | 1 Night (8 h sleep) | ↑ Plasma ICAM-1, IL-6, norepinephrine | ND | Sauvet et al.[ |
| Healthy men ( | 1 Night with 2 h sleep | ↑ Total leukocytes, neutrophils | 1 Night of 8 h sleep or 1 night of 10 h sleep | 8 h Recovery sleep: ↑ leukocytes, neutrophils; 10 h recovery sleep: = leukocytes, neutrophils | 8 h Recovery sleep: = leukocytes, neutrophils; 10 h recovery sleep: ↓ leukocytes, neutrophils | Faraut et al.[ |
| Healthy men ( | 5 Nights with 4 h sleep/night | ↓ NK cells; ↑ B cells; ↑ plasma CRP; ↑ IL-17, IL-1β, IL-6 (PBMC mRNA); ↓ TNF-α (PBMC protein) | 2 Nights (8 h sleep/night) | = NK cells; = B cells; ↑ CRP, IL-17; = IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α | ND | van Leeuwen et al.[ |
| Healthy men ( | 5 Nights with 4 h sleep/night | ↑ Total leukocytes, monocytes, neutrophils, lymphocytes | 7 Nights (8 h sleep/night) | ↓ Monocytes, lymphocytes; ↑ neutrophils | ND | Lasselin et al.[ |
| Healthy men and women ( | 1 Night with 4 h sleep | ↑ IL-6 and TNF-α (PBMC protein) | 1 Night (8 h sleep) | ↑ IL-6 and TNF-α | ND | Irwin et al.[ |
| Healthy men ( | 88 h TSD (Exp. 1) and 10 days with 4.2 h sleep/night (Exp. 2) | ↑ Plasma CRP | 3 Nights (assessment only in the first recovery day) | ↑ Plasma CRP | ND | Meier-Ewert et al.[ |
| Healthy men and women ( | 1 night with 4 h sleep | ↑ IL-6 and TNF-α (PBMC protein) in younger adults | 1 night (8 h sleep) | ↑ IL-6 and TNF-α | ND | Carroll et al.[ |
| Healthy men and women ( | 6 Nights with 6 h sleep/night | ↑ Plasma IL-6 | 3 Nights (10 h sleep/night) | = Plasma IL-6 | ↓ Plasma IL-6 | Pejovic et al.[ |
| Healthy men and women ( | 5 Nights with 4 h sleep/night, for 3 weeks | ↑ IL-6 (PBMC protein) | 2 Nights (8 h sleep/night), for 3 weeks | ↑ IL-6 (PBMC protein) | ND | Simpson et al.[ |
BP blood pressure, exp experiment, ICAM-1 intercellular adhesion molecule-1, ND not determined, PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cells, SD sleep deprivation, TSD total sleep deprivation, VCAM-1 vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, yrs years, ↑ significant increase, ↓ significant decrease, = no significant change.